Bottle By DAN RUBEN ITHE MICHIGAN STATE Leg- islature now faces an oppor- tunity to pass a major piece of environmental legislation. Pro- posals are being considered in both houses of the legislature which would require minimum deposits on all beverage con- tainers. The use of throwaway cans and bottles is a waste. The En- vironmental Protection Agency (EPA) testified that the nation- wide use of returnables would save the energy equivalent of 92,000 barrels of oil per day. According to EPA, throwaways use three times as much ener- gy as returnables to produce the same amount of beverage. The use of throwaways creates a senseless litter nuisance. In Oregon, where the first bottle bill was passed, the Oregon State Highway Department con- ducted surveys before and after the passage of the bill. The pre- bill surveys showed that 62 per cent of highway litter by volume consisted of throwaway bever- age containers. Since passage, the number of cans and bottles littered on Oregon's highways has dropped by 90 per cent. In Michigan, the Department of State Highways and Transporta- bill dumps on disposables tion says "avoidable litter" costs Michigan taxpayers annu- ally between $600,000 and $700,- 000. ANOTHER BENEFIT of the bottle bill should please infla- tion-wary consumers. A 1974 study of Washington, D.C. liquor stores showed beer in returnable bottles averaging eighty - one cents less per case than beer in throwaways. At Campus Cor- ners and Village Corners, each Strohs returnable costs about "Each returnable costs about three cents less than its throw- away counterpart. This is true simply be- cause it is cheaper to re-use a container than it is to replace it." three cents less than its throw- away counterpart. This is true simply because it is cheaper to re-use a container than it is to replace it. The major criticism against the bottle bill has been voiced by elements of labor who fear it will cost jobs. The evidence, however, indicates that the op- posite is true. The Oregon State University determined that de- spite some job losses, the Ore- gon bottle bill resulted in a net gain of 365 jobs. Dr. Myron Ross, a Western Michigan Uni- versity economist, has estimated that enforcement of the bottle law would result in a net gain of more than 9,000 jobs in Mich- igan. Locally and statewide, the con- sumer advocacy group, PIR- GIM, is playing the major role in mobilizing support and lobby- ing for the bottle bill. This week, PIRGIM has set up a letter-writ- ing table in the fishbowl. It is crucial to make your feelings known to the legislators who will decide the fate of this measure. It is not a sure bet that the legislature will act in the public interest. We must each do what we can to get the message to our representatives. PIRGIM IS ATTEMPTING a massive letter-writing campaign which extends beyond the fish- bowl table. They would like dorms, co-ops, fraternities, sor- orities, apartment buildings, and neighborhoods to organize large scale letter-writing. If you would like to help PIRGIM pass this environmentally and economical- ly sane proposal,. call Tom Moran at 995-9450. Dan Ruben is an'LSA senior. Letters to The Daily 941C 51C1143ZU1 Daitfj Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Tuesday, October 28, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 There's no place like home T CAME AS no surprise last week when the University's Off-Cam- pus Housing Office revealed a one- half per cent vacancy rate this year for non-University housing facilities on central campus. Each January, the nomadic student population is forced to start search- Ing for next fall's apartments in the hopes of finding relatively decent ac- commodations. By late March or early April, the pickings have already become lean and students are often forced to take apartments with high rents, tissue-thin walls, and unrelia- ble plumbing. The housing shortage in the cen- tral campus area has reached drastic proportions over the past 10 years. Last spring, University housing turn- ed away 1,200 prospective dorm dwell- ers - forcing them to find alternate accommodations in the already-glut- ted off-campus housing market. TO COMPOUND THE seriousness of the situation, the overall vacancy TODAY'S STAFF News: Barb Cornell,, Mitch Dimick, David Garfinkle,, Keh Parsigian, Sara Rimer,, Tim Schick, Jeff Sor- ensen, Jim Tobin, Editorial Page: Marc Basson,, Paul Haskins, Debra Hurwitz, Ted Lam-' bert, Jon Pansius, Tom Stevens Arts Page: David Blomquist Photo Technician: E. Susan Sheiner rate for the entire city is only 1.5 per cent - several percentage points be- low what is considered a healthy rate. Very low vacancy rates, such as the one that exists in Ann Arbor, make it possible for the landlord to pro- vide high-cost, shoddy housing be- cause demand is nearly equal with supply. Free enterprise being what it is, there will most likely be no sponta- neous solution to the housing prob- lem. One would harIly expect a land- lord to be suddenly smitten by al- truism and lower rents just to give students a break. Obviously, the University Housing Office should be exploring the possi- bility of constructing additional dorms or converting already existing buildings into suitable student ac- commodations. There are low-inter- est federal loans available for this purpose and providing additional University housing would do much to relieve overcrowded conditions in the student slums. THERE WAS some speculation last year that the University might buy the Ann Arbor Inn for possible use as a dormitory, but this plan has apparently fallen through. It is now time that the University started actively searching again for new student accommodations before overcrowding reaches even more se- vere proportions. 0 Sadat appear to have been defeated, in reality you are the victor. To The Daily: You have succeeded in creating IN VIEW OF Egyptian Presi- dissensions between Churchill, dent Sadat's first visit to the the old man, and his allies, the U.S. and all the praise he is Sons of Satan. Germany will win likely to get from the White because her existence is neces- House and the media ,as an sary to preserve the world bal- "Angel" of peace, moderation ance. Germany will be reborn and humanity, we believe a lit- in spite of the Western and East- tle history is of value. It is well ern powers. There will be no established that as a young of- peace unless Germany once ficer Sadat was arrested and again becomes what she was. convicted in Egypt during World The West, as well as the East, War II as a German spy. His will pay for her rehabilitation- German friends also publicized whether they like it or not. Both later in European newspapers sides will invest a great deal of his loyalty to Nazism and his money' and effort in Germany, fervent Antisemitism. These in order to have her on their facts are usually belittled as the side, which is of great benefit "follies of a young nationalist." to Germany. So much for the However, by 1953 Sadat was a present and the future. member of the new Egyptian "As for the past, I think you "revolutionary" ruling clique - made some mistakes, like too the small group of officers head- many battlefronts and the short- ed by Nasser who took over the sightedness of Ribbentrop vis-a- country from the old "reaction- vis the experienced British dip- ary" regime of King Faruq. lomany. But your trust in your In September 1953, several country and people will atone news agencies reported that Hit- for those blunders. You may be ler was still alive. On the basis proud of having become the of this report, a Cairo weekly, immortal leader of Germany. "Al Musawwar," asked a num- We will not be surprised if you ber of Egyptian personalities appear again in Germany or if the following question: "If you a new Hitler rises up in your wished to send Hitler a personal wake. letter, what would you write to "Anwar al-Sadat" him?"- The "Sons of Satan" is obvi- Anwar Sadat was one of those ously a reference to the Ameri- questioned. His answer publish- can people who were fighting ed in "Al Musawwar" No. 1510 against Hitler Germany in World on 18 September 1953, reads as War II. Sadat had to shed a follows: number of skins since that let- ter was written, to become first "MY DEAR HITLER, a "friend" of the Russians, and "I congratulate you from the now of the Americans. Has he bottom of my heart. Even if you also changed inside? mThe Lighter Side<>': : ::......:... Poverty: It has its political advantages r.:................. .........}, :.::::::::, ".: D ic k W e st By DICK WEST WASHINGTON UPI - If you have read any bedtime stories lately, you are aware that some are too outdated for today's kids to relate to. Here's one that has just been revised to make it more rele- vant: "The City Mouse and the Country Mouse" Once upon a time in a faraway land a country mouse went to visit his cousin in the city. "I can't hack it down on the farm any longer," the country mouse said. "We field mice are as poor as church mice and often go to bed hungry. "I've heard there are many more opportunities for mice in the city, particularly during garbage strikes. So if you don't mind I'll crash in your pad until I can get it together." "WELCOME, COUSIN," said the city mouse. "And you are right about things being better here. No mouse in the city goes hungry. Check in at the rodent assistance office and you'll be given enough cheese to meet the minimum daily adult mouse re- quirement." "Good," said the country mouse, who promptly made a nest out of shredded municipal bonds and went to sleep. Several days later the city mouse broached his cousin and said, "I don't enjoy bringing up unpleasant subjects, but hadn't you better start looking for work?" "Why should I?" said the country mouse, who was fast be- come street wise. "I get by just fine on that free cheese they give you here in the city." "YEAH, BUT YOU don't want to spend the rest of your life on welfare," said the city mouse. "If you get a job and apply yourself diligently you can event- ually work up to unemployment compensation." Soon another country mouse came to the city. Then another and another. Finally the city mouse said, "I don't wish to alarm anyone but the city is running out of rat cheese." "That's ridiculous," squeaked the country mouse. "Now all the fat cats are moving to the suburbs and taking their saucers budget To The Daily: PRESIDENT FORD'S recent- ly proposed "budget" for fiscal year 1976 is of such an irra- tional nature that I couldn't help wondering as to what it actually implied. As all who have read it have realized, there is the immense military spending sum of 92 billion dollars in the fore- cast. Even Ford can't help but admit that this will increase the aggregate deficit of the country to a total of 52 billion dollars by 1977. It is wholly inconceiv- able to me why the head of a capitalist state (or whomever decides policy) would institute such a destructive policy. First of all, military spending is the most unproductive way to sink capital. You would think that even the most reactionary leaders of se- curity - capitalistic states would attempt, either really or at least pragmatically, to straighten out a country's finances in the face of such an astronomical deficit. Not Ford. He appears to be has- tening what I feel to be the in- evitable demise of capitalism. Ford has probably resigned to the real possibility that there is no one to take over the capital ship this time and is preparing the country for impending so- cial upheavals and complete economic collapse. HISTORICALLY speaking, . a s t a t e witnessing desperate times, becomes the victim - of just so many possibilities: mili- tary aggression (unfeasible since this would certainly mean the end-even the ruling class- es aren't immune from nuclear weapons), or else the formation of a fascist police state consist- ing of politico-military take-over of key industries with the cre- ation of a central, state-con- trolled bank to develop produc- tive industry. Consider the op- tions-there aren't many left. I welcome comment or criti- cism on what I have said here. Marc Jaffee October 27 Letters should be typed and limited to 400 words. The Daily reserves the right to edit letters for length and grammar. concert To The Daily: ANN ARBOR AUDIENCES ought to be ashamed. How can we expect excellent concerts if we are so apathetic toward the bands who come' here? The other night Loggins and Messina gave an outstanding performance. They were vi- brant: dancing around t h e stage, playing long and hard, begging the audience to partici- pate. They did their best to get the audience involved in their music, but people just re- fsed to respond. It was not un- til the finale that people even began to react. After a lot of convincing, Loggins and Messina gave us two encores, and in our opin- ion, two more than we deserv- ed. Thank you, Loggins and Messina, for your excellence. We're only sorry the Ann Ar- bor audiences don't know a good thing when they hear it. Lian Sher Debbie Santavy October 24 Scratch 'n suffer tickets 'Il 3 4 ~~ > ~ ~., 2t By JAY LEVIN - HAVE RECENTLY given up a very expen- sive habit. It's not smoking (I don't smoke), nor pinball (never play. bad flipper control), but lottery tickets. Ever since Michigan inaugurated its highly touted "instant game" three weeks ago, I have done the -equivalent of flushing five dol- lars down the john. The day after its debut, I ran to a local drug store and anxiously pushed my greenback across the counter in exchange for a little green, silver and red foil-covered ticket. Fol- lowing the instructions, I fished in my pocket for a coin and vigorously rubbed the foil from the ticket. And presto! Revealed were two $2 rectangles, two $5 rectangles and two $10,000 rectangles. According to the rules of the game, you need three identical amounts to win that prize. "Aw, shoot," I thought to myself. One more $10,000 rectangle and I wouldn't have to worry about tuition anymore. SO LIKE A spineless idiot, I went back the next day, dollar clenched in hand, and pur- chased another ticket. Out came the coin, off came the foil and into the trash went an- other loser. Determined, I repeated the process three more times, even going as far to change ven- dors. But no matter where I threw away my money, the losers kept coming. The odds on winning the two buck prize, (which can be claimed, along with five dollar winners, at the place of purchase) is rough- ly one in ten, and the chances of winning larger prizes are considerably slimmer. The way I look at it, in crude mathematical terms, I'd have to buy five more tickets to win a $2 prize. At that rate I'd still be eight bucks in the red. The only advantages of this instant game is tht now you can lose quickly instead of wait- ing around for next week's drawing. But what really changed my feelings on state lotteries was an incident last Wednesday that substantiated rumors over whether or not these games are kosher. NEW YORK GOVERNOR Hugh Carey dis- banded that state's eight year old lottery after a computer botched up and printed duplicate tickets. Now the state is faced with the grue- some task of refunding millions of ticket hold- ers whose games were axed by Carey's move, including the $250,000 Colossus drawing slated for Halloween. Serves you right, New York! Being a resi- dent of that state, I've parted with a hefty wad of cash in the past four years for lottery tickets. Two years ago, I came up a winner of five free tickets. Naturally, they were all losers, too. And the exploitation of these state lotteries is getting out of control. This past summer, we were treated to the televised final draw- ink's of New York's million dollar sweepstakes, direct from the ballroom of one of Manhat- tan's ritzier hotels. The folks from Albany managed to scrane up, of all people, Monty JaTl (You can either ]Seel> the money in the envelone or trade it for the box where Jay Stewart is now standing) to emcee the extra- 1"'rnn7a At the end of the half hour, some (iv7 n-,ens hbosewife danced merrily around thQ million dollars she'd just won: gobs of -n"ev l id ont for all to foam at the mouth n w-h l Monty Hall flashed his toothpaste smile for the television audience. THE ULTIMATE GAME show, enough to make vox unchuck! So I am renouncing my faith in state lotteries and refuse to help fat- ten up Michigan's budget anymore at a dollar a shot. The only instant thing the instant lottery has provided me with has been an in- stant shortage of pocket money. Jay Levin is a Daily staff writer. !si< i . .j Xa a' ." .txY . '.t$;;Rr,,'X'. i t it i X 54h.:.L' Yitlr txt. '? +"AwA". s ..ri. 2 ra ..'.' i':i.i . ?. ,.,; y .,. y, .}; ... ...